The Art of Seeing Art

I went to three wonderful and very different art shows this week that are still open.

Cecil Beaton: The New York Years

at the  Museum of the City of New York,  www.mcny.org
“Perhaps the world’s second-worst crime is boredom; the first is being a bore.”Cecil Beaton

From the 1920s through the ‘60s, Manhattan’s artistic and social circles embraced British-born photographer and designer Cecil Beaton (1904-80). Cecil Beaton: The New York Years brings together extraordinary photographs, drawings, and costumes by Beaton to chronicle his impact on the city’s cultural life. Beaton’s relentless energy and curiosity spurred him to pursue new fields, from fashion and portrait photography to costume and scenic design for Broadway, ballet, and opera, and to put his own aesthetic stamp on each of these endeavors.

Beaton designed the sets and costumes for My Fair Lady

Great Garbo, who was the one woman he loved

Self portrait

Self-portrait

Marlon Brando 1948

Daniel A. Bruce

at the Dean Project, www.deanproject.com

In his words:

My most recent objects and images were conceived as conflations of my own personal idiosyncrasies regarding power and value. These investigations require that I discern the ruses and value relations of our postmodern condition in order to re-purpose a stratagem of my own that highlights the suspect nature and ideological parameters of convention. My interest dwells in the moment when sign-value takes precedence over use-value and the location of this moment in the history of commodity. The work is aligned with what I have coined a ‘bumpkin aesthetic’—the methodological combination of the awkward and unsophisticated with the ideals of artistic validity. ‘Bumpkin Aesthetic’ as a methodological combination has a conflicted nature that simultaneously conjures both high and low cultural practice in advocation of ambiguity, heterogeneity, and freedom.

Compost (detail) fest. Daniel

Rustic Room (Deer Head)

Untitled, 2011

Pig With Wings, 2012

 

George Platt Lynes

at the Stephen Kasher Gallery, www.stephenkasher.com

George Platt Lynes did not initially intend to have a career in photography. The summer after his graduation from high school, Lynes traveled to Paris, where he met the writers Gertrude Stein and Jean Cocteau. He returned to enroll at Yale University but left school after one semester. His parents helped him start a publishing house, but the business soon failed. The serendipitous gift of a camera led him into taking portraits of his literary friends, including Marianne Moore, Colette, and W.H. Auden. In 1933 Lynes opened his first New York studio where he did fashion photography for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar; throughout the 1930s his elegant portraits gained popularity among the city’s elite. The 1940s saw at once Lynes’ decline as a fashion photographer and the production of his exceptional work with the male nude. After an ill-fated foray into Hollywood publicity photography, Lynes returned to New York, but was stricken with debt and illness. Diagnosed with cancer in May 1955, he died later that year at age 48.
In 1935, Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine invited Lynes to produce promotional photographs for their ballet company. Kirstein, who had been Lynes’ schoolmate, realized that this work would perfectly fuse Lynes’ talents in fashion and portrait photography. For twenty years, Lynes photographed many of the era’s greatest ballet dancers.

Untitled, 1936

Untitled, 1933

Gloria Swanson, 1939

Sono Osato, 1937

Elizabeth Gibbons, 1938

Untitled, 1941

 

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Design Diary: Hurry It’s Lovely Up Here

One of the rare treats of this apartment is a fantastic city garden. Measuring 50 x 30 feet, it’s actually bigger than the apartment itself. And every room faces onto it. I had a simple concept for the garden. I wanted it to be clean, modern, and very architectural– enhancing the spirit of the apartment itself. We enlisted Paul Harness of Plant Specialists who came up with a fantastic scheme.

There were a few inherent problems. Light is an issue. Paul analyzed the space to figure out what will grow best and in what location.

There is an ugly fence on the West Side that we can’t change. He suggested a great fence to place in front of it made of horizontal knotty cedar boards. We are also creating an area behind the fence to hide the air conditioning units and for storage.

New fencing concept

The blue-stone pavers were laid in an  ugly random pattern. Paul is sorting them and laying them in varied “stripes” in a great modern way.

The center will have birch trees that form a custom-designed personal park. Other areas include chaise lounges to read and sun, and a dining area for dinner parties. He selected beautiful vertical trees for the Eastern wall.

Birch trees

Trees for Eastern Wall

One of the most unique features is a huge mirror that will extend the western view of the garden and double the size of the planting.

Lighting throughout will create a great mood from every window in the apartment.

The client also asked for a swing for the grandchildren. Paul found this minimalist piece that will have rubber chips underneath so they don’t get hurt.

Swing

Rubber chips

Construction started on the garden this week as you can see in the photos.

Plan by Plant Specialists

Before Photo showing existing fence

Before shot of East WallLaying out the new “park”

Week one in the garden

Proceeding apace

UPDATE FROM THE SITE:

They have taken out the lower walls under the existing windows. There are all being replaced by sliding doors. You can see how open the apartment becomes and the visual flow from inside to outside.

Indoor/Outdoor

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You’ve got to crack the eggs. . .

Construction has begun and our contractor, Mark Azzapardi, of KNG Construction has gutted the apartment back to the structure. It’s a bit shocking, but exciting. I’m glad the clients are away so they won’t see how little is left of their expensive NY investment.

There were no bad surprises. We picked up lots of extra inches, pipes where where we hoped they’d be.  There were some hidden leaks that would have caused future problems that we can repair.

Today, they will start framing the walls.

The view toward the future guest room

View toward the future Master Bedroom

View from future living room looking out at garden

Reminder of pre-demo living room

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